News
South Korea blasts Japan for radioactive water leak cover-up at Fukushima
Government minister delivers scathing condemnation.
Lloyd's to review South Korea nuclear reactor certificates
Follows embarrassing scandal over fake safety certificates.
CB&I to provide EPC services for Chinese nuclear plants
Enters into JV with China Power Investment Corporation.
Thailand and China to build wind farms in Myanmar
Now carrying-out feasibility studies.
India to auction solar power licenses
License to build solar power plants resumes after two years.
Singaporeans to be hit by higher power bills
Tariffs up by 0.5% for next three months.
India, US sign first commercial nuclear plant deal
Both make enormous progress on civilian nuclear power.
IMEM commercial operations begin 26 Nov
Launch was on 26 Sept.
Ming Yang wins wind turbine contract at offshore wind farm
Will supply 29 SCD wind turbines.
World solar power growth outpaces wind for the first time
Driven by plunge in new wind energy capacity.
ADB funds Indian renewable energy transmission system
Will provide US$500 million for this project.
Marubeni to refurbish Philippine power plant
Project will cost US$700 million.
Philippines set to double solar power capacity this year
Will exceed 5 MW from 2 MW.
China needs effective solutions for energy hunger
Uses up one fifth of global coal consumption.
India’s coal minister says India should use more coal
Coal to supply over half of India’s energy needs.
Solar firms should start focusing on small, emerging markets
Report says these markets are the future. A new report by IHS estimates that photovoltaic installations in small, emerging markets could rise at about triple the global average during the period from 2012 through 2017. Annual installations in these emerging countries are expected to increase to 10.9 GW in 2017, expanding at a compound annual growth rate of 38% from 2.2 GW in 2012. In contrast, the overall global market will expand at a CAGR of only 13% during the same period. The emerging markets will account for 19% of global solar installations in 2017, up from just 7% in 2012. IHS noted that across the world, new markets for solar PV are emerging, propelled by government incentives, including tenders for large-scale contracts, feed-in-tariff schemes and self-consumption support. Although these markets sometimes have huge hurdles like limited financing, regulatory uncertainty and opaque local regulatory conditions, companies throughout the solar supply chain can benefit from targeting these fast-growing emerging countries. Of the emerging countries IHS analyzed, Thailand and Turkey are expected to become the largest markets in the coming years. Both countries have the potential to install a cumulative total of nearly 3 GW of PV systems during the period from 2013 through 2017.